Knitting technology, Third Edition



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21.5
The advent of nylon
With only yarns such as rayon, silk, cotton and worsted available for knitting, bag-
giness (particularly around the ankle) of ladies’ fine gauge circular knitted seamless
hose caused them to be regarded as a cheap but inferior rival to the more shapely
fully fashioned hose knitted on the straight bar frame. The former was even pro-
vided with an imitation of the fashionable seam at the back of the leg. There was
thus little encouragement for circular hose manufacturers to re-equip and, in 1946,
only a quarter of circular hose machines knitting in British factories could produce
an automatic in-turned welt; and most machines had only a single feed.
In the same year, nylon, the ideal stocking yarn, became plentifully available. Not
only was it a cheap, strong, fine and uniform yarn, it had the major asset of being
thermoplastic so that articles knitted from it could be heat-set into shapes whose
form they would permanently retain, provided that the setting temperature was
never exceeded during washing and wearing.
21.6
Trends in fine-gauge hosiery since 1956
The straight bar frame was, at first, the main beneficiary of the huge demand that
was unleashed for nylon stockings. This caused machine gauges to become pro-
gressively finer, and productivity to rise dramatically, as operations became more
automated and efficient and knitting speeds increased.
For the circular hose machine, the advent of nylon meant that a combination of
stitch- and heat-shaping could now produce a stocking with satisfactory leg-fitting
properties, provided ladies’ fashion would accept it.
Fashion intervened in the late 1950s, when, with skirts getting progressively
shorter, the younger and then all generations, opted for the 
‘bare leg’ look
in 
preference to the seamed leg.
Similarly, in 1966, the advent of the mini skirt brought the welted tops of 


260
Knitting technology
seamless stockings into view and the conversion from stockings to more comfort-
able and less-noticeable 
self-supporting tights
began.
For the seamless hosiery industry, the period from 1956 became one of dramatic
and revolutionary changes in knitting, making-up, dyeing and finishing, marketing,
and fashion. Although hiccups are produced by swings of fashion, the following
trends are noticeable:

the simplification of styles, knitting machines, and making-up;

the increasing automation of making-up operations, handling, and transporta-
tion; and

higher knitting speeds and/or numbers of feeders.
In twenty years there was a five-fold increase in productivity per knitting machine.
Increasingly fierce competition and drastic reductions in the prices of stockings and
tights have transformed the overall image from one of fashionable luxury and
glamour (only about 8 to 10 per cent of ladies’ tights production is patterned) to
that of a mass-produced commodity article.
Some of the specific developments that occurred during this period are now 
discussed.
The slow and expensive reciprocated and linked-closed toe was replaced on a
twin-feed machine in 1956 by all-circular knitted courses of spliced fabric, which was
later cut and seam shaped into a toe.
In the same year, the 
Reymes Cole
patent described how the reciprocated heel
might also be replaced, in this case, by part-circular knitted splicing courses on
selected heel section needles.
In 1961, the four-feed 
Billi Zodiac
machine popularised the tube stocking with a
patch heel by knitting a stocking in 2 minutes 10 seconds, compared with the 12
minutes taken to knit a stocking with a reciprocated and heel toe on a single-feed
machine in the early 1950s. Speeds and numbers of feeds were then gradually
increased, with a six-feed machine running at 210 rpm in 1963 and, by 1971, a twelve-
feed machine running at 260 rpm.
Today, demands for higher quality and more versatility led to a reduction in the
number of feeds so that machines now generally have 4 or 6 feeds and commercial
operating speeds of 1000–1200 rpm. Electronic controls have reduced the number
of mechanical parts so that less mechanical attention is necessary. At the same time,
machine manning has been improved so that one person may now run 60–80
machines, whilst 5 kilogram yarn packages can reduce yarn package replacement to
5-day intervals.
The 
Matec
HF range of fine-gauge tights machines do not select needles by using
levers. Instead, knit or miss selection is obtained by means of a high-frequency
current that changes the polarity of a metal plate which, through another element,
moves the selector jack into either the knit or the non-knit camtracks. Needle-by-
needle selection is achieved at a speed of 1000 rpm.
On a 6-feed machine, it is possible to knit tights with 5 colours and any structure
in the ground at a speed of 800 rpm [1].
Recently there has been an increasing use of 
Lycra
and other elastane yarns, in
bare or in covered form, at every course or at alternate courses, either by knitting,
laying-in or plating. This has not only improved fit and comfort, it has improved
wear and thus reduced consumption.
Elasticated medical support hosiery with 
graduated compression
has long been
available. It allows the blood to flow back more easily in the leg. Advances in the


The manufacture of hosiery on small-diameter circular machines
261
knitting of fine-gauge elasticated hosiery, such as finer yarns and electronic-control
of the graduated knitted leg shape, have led to the development of the 
Lycra Leg
Care
scheme for the fashion side of ladies’ fine-gauge hosiery. The scheme is based
on objective and measurable standards using 
Lycra
yarns. This enables fine-gauge
stockings and tights to be made with smooth, comfortable, graduated compression
for body-shape control and improved blood circulation. There is a choice of three
compression levels – light, medium and firm – based on pressure gradient levels.
One rather unsuccessful development has been the 
automatically knitted closed
toe
, which was almost immediately replaced by the 
cut-and-sew toe
produced by the
automatic toe-sewing equipment used during making-up operations.
In seamless hosiery finishing equipment, the dye-boarder, introduced in the early
1960s, replaced, in a single cycle, the separate operations of scouring, pre-boarding,
dyeing and post-boarding, thus reducing labour content as well as 
pull threads
caused during handling. Today, ladies’ hosiery ranges from 7 denier ultra sheers to
70 denier opaques, in such forms as tights, stockings, hold-ups and knee-highs.

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